“…Though desirable, and in principle consistent with the HDA, a theory of harm that would apply universally to the human case is elusive and philosophically highly controversial. Moreover, in the human case, the appeal to a culture-transcendent standard for harm that resembles current Western philosophical views but is to be applied universally in medical diagnosis raises worrisome issues of implicit Western triumphalism and of turning medicine into another battlefield in culture wars in which some people's needs are ignored because their condition is not deemed to be truly harmful (for an example of this danger, see Powell and Scarffe 2019;Wakefield and Conrad 2019). I tend to think that the social values addendum suitably broadly interpreted remains relatively benign and useful, that what are claimed by critics to be culture-transcendent "factual" human values are implicit in every human cultural value system, and that many of the harms human beings suffer are pro tanto harms related to their social roles and expectations.…”